Skull Bones: Mandible

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2–3 minutes

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The mandible, or lower jaw bone, joins with the temporal bone at the temporal-mandibular joint. It is the culprit of TMJ diseases.

  • Mandibular condyle
  • Coronoid process
  • Mandibular angle
  • Mandibular ramus
  • Mandibular body
  • Mental foramen
  • Mandibular notch

The mandible or the lower jaw bone is more complicated that you would think.  It’s a curved bone, actually two bones, fused together.  The mandible has two general areas. The ramus means slope. The body is like the piece under your teeth.  Feel your mandible in your face.  Because you have a small fad pad between the skin and bone here you can feel the bone.  There is only one feature in the body that you have to know called the mental foramen.  This is a little hole through which nerves run.  These nerves are part of a big nerve that comes from your cranium called the trigeminal nerve.  This is the nerve that serves your teeth and makes them sensitive.  The only feature on the ramus is the mandibular angle.  Look where this is on the picture an feel where it is on the side of your face.  This is where the bone angles upward to meet with your temporal bone of the skull. 

The top of the mandible forms a Y.  These two points or ends of the Y are called processes.  Sometimes they are also called condyles. We know this word means a knobby end that fits with another bone.  We talked about the mandibular process as part of the temporomandibular joint.  This is the posterior process on the bone, the anterior process is called the coronoid process.  Yes, you also have a coronoid process on the ulna.  Is it on the anterior or posterior of the ulna?  Huh??

The mandible isn’t really a skull bone, but a facial bone.  It is attached to the skull mostly by tendons and ligaments. These connect to the mastoid process. There is also a point of the mandible called the mandibular condyle. It fits into the temporal bone.  This little indentation on the temporal bone is the called the mandibular fossa.  When you have TMJ, it can result from grinding your teeth. This condition is the inflammation of the temporal-mandibular joint. It is the place where the mandible fits into the temporal bone.  If the lower jaw becomes dislocated, the trick is to apply pressure downward on the bottom of the mouth. This will release the bones and allow them to move into place.  The maxilla is the upper jaw and the cheekbone is called the zygomatic bone.

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